10/3/12

With just a few weeks to go for the CAT 2012, Rajesh Balasubramanian shares a few do’s and dont’s on how to crack the test.

Everyone gets nervous before a key exam. I took my 5th CAT last year, 11
years after my first CAT and 9 years after finishing my MBA from IIM
Bangalore. And, I was nervous. You are not alone in having that vague
anxious feeling. The key to a high-powered performance is to convert
this nervous energy into positive adrenaline rather than just something
that bogs you down. Plan to fly off the blocks.

If you get consumed in the paper in the first 10 minutes, then chances
are that you will remain switched-on throughout. Don’t think about the
overall paper; or even the section for the first 20-25 minutes. Think
like Virendra Sehwag. He is the kind of guy who might be beaten three
balls in a row and hit the next three for boundaries.

Take one question at a time. If you want to imagine someone who appears even cooler under pressure, think Usain Bolt.

In the last few weeks prior to an exam, the biggest challenge facing
students concerns balancing the several demands placed on them. It is
easy to lose focus and feel overwhelmed by it all. One needs to guard
against this, while simultaneously working on the many moving parts
without. Let us focus on a few key competing demands and realign our
priorities.

Learning & consolidation

Now is the right time to give up on some of the vague topics. In the
last few weeks, plan to optimize your performance. Do not spend too much
time learning new stuff from now on. Picking obscure questions from
non-descript websites and obsessing over them should be avoided. How you
optimize your performance in the exam is far more important than
getting some odd detail right. To give you an analogy - If you are an
opening batsman about to represent India in the world cup and realize
that your follow through after a cover drive needs correction. What
would you do? Enroll yourself for a six-week session with batting guru
or forget about it and focus on more immediate things?

Now is the time to plant seeds so that your brain can pick standard
things much quicker. Don’t load it with new information. If you can
train your mind to pick standard spelling errors, standard Pythagorean
triplets in the actual exam, you will be better off for it than if you
studied about the Oxford comma.

This is where practice exams come in very handy. They teach you to
become exam savvy without agonizing over every detail. Take plenty of
practice exams, and fill the gaps in learning based on the feedback you
get from these.

Taking tests

A simple thumb-rule to keep in mind - Spend at least as much time
reviewing a mock CAT as you spent taking it. And when you are reviewing a
test focus on these three things — what are the ones that I skipped
that I have attempted, more importantly, what are the questions that I
have tried that I should have skipped, and what is the solution to these
questions that I have missed? Do not analyze percentiles, rankings,
etc.

Never take two tests in a day. Do not plan to take more than four tests
per week. Your mind is not a machine. It needs time to recover. If you
are ready to take a mock CAT within 4 hours of having finished one, the
simple truth is that you have not thrown enough into the mock CAT.

Intense learning

You cannot prepare for 12 hours a day for CAT. This is not an exam where
low-intensity-warfare type of preparation pays off. This is an exam
where how sharp you are when you take an exam matters more than how much
you know. There is no point increasing the knowledge base if your brain
goes AWOL for 15 minutes during an exam. And you can take CAT for 140
minutes with intensity only if you are well rested.

Sleep a lot. Eat well. Drink a lot of fluids.

The day before the exam

This one is easy – neither. The day before the exam, find a routine that
relaxes you well. Do not get too many inputs from any 'expert'. Put
your feet up, watch some sitcom or sports on TV, sleep early and be
physically and mentally ready.

The odds of learning something in the last 24 hours that will be of use
in the exam are very low. On the other hand, a sharp mind might bail you
out in three questions, which might make a difference of four
percentile points.

Optimism vs. Pragmatism

Carry the belief that you can crack this into the exam hall. But have
the prudence to have a plan B and the maturity to know where you stand.
Getting 98th percentile might not get one a call from the IIMs these
days, but if you rank in the top two percent in the country that is
something to feel happy about. It is important to keep your expectations
reasonable.

Other options

Another aspect that will keep you relaxed is the belief that everything
does not ride on this one day, one exam. Don’t burn your bridges at
office; do not throw away a job offer because you are anyway going to do
an MBA. Do not ignore XAT after CAT gets over. Apply to colleges beyond
the IIMs.

A great many things that I have mentioned here are easier said than
done. As a student, I had forgotten to apply to FMS, had taken up XAT in
an overconfident daze, had slept during an exam while doing MBA and
have generally committed all the mistakes stated above at some point of
time or other. Don’t put undue pressure on yourself. If CAT 2012 goes
well, great. If it doesn’t, keep in mind that a majority of the
successful businesses in our country are run by people who did not do
their MBA from an IIM. Best wishes for CAT

The author is course director for CAT at 2iim. He takes the CAT every year to stay in touch.